It’s a start, but none of us should get a warm fuzzy until a stake is put through the heart of SOPA and PIPA.

The Internet can claim a victory, but do not get out the champagne and party favors just yet. As reported at The Hill, House Oversight Chairman Darrell Issa (R-CA) said early Saturday that Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-VA) promised him the House will not vote on the controversial Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) unless there is consensus on the bill.

“While I remain concerned about Senate action on the Protect IP Act, I am confident that flawed legislation will not be taken up by this House,” Issa said in a statement. “Majority Leader Cantor has assured me that we will continue to work to address outstanding concerns and work to build consensus prior to any anti-piracy legislation coming before the House for a vote.”

Late today came word that six Republican senators have asked Majority Leader Harry Reid to postpone a vote on Pro IP, also known as PIPA. The senators wrote: “Prior to committee action, some members expressed substantive concerns about the bill, and there was a commitment to resolve them prior to floor consideration.”

For those of you who do not know what SOPAandPIPA is, please familiarize yourself. It impacts all that use the Internet from bloggers to Facebook, from Googleto YouTube. These two bills are supposed to prevent on-line piracy; however, like ever poorly written bill, its the law of unintended circumstances that all that currently use the Internet can already see. Do we really want Congress to pass another bill into law where it has to be passed so that we can see whats in it? Bad legislation is bad legislation. It should cause pause for all, no matter if they are on the LEFT, RIGHT or CENTER, when a government looks to restrict Freedom of Speech under the guise of a piracy bill. This is one issue where we can all come together and “JUST SAY NO” to SOPA and PIPA!

Did Congress actually think they were going to slip such a bill that would affect so many under the cloak of darkness? Shame on all of you who backed, supported and sponsored this bill. Many of which who are in complete retreat due to the backlash of “We the People”.

Reddit and maybe Wikipedia was supposed to go “dark” for 12 hours on January 18 to protest SOPA. Maybe they will still do so to protest PIPA. Imagine if YouTube, Facebook and Google went dark to protest as well? Maybe that is what it will take for law makers to realize that writing BS bills will not be tolerated.

Comments

4 Responses to “Internet Censorship: SOPA Shelved Until ‘consensus’ is Found … PIPA still Has Vote on January 24th”

Roxy on
January 15th, 2012 1:57 pm

This is really scarey because now we have the ability to find out who is doing what, big companies and politicians doing shady things. Important because the law doesn’t always protect us from the bad guys if the bad guys have a lot of money…I think this law could keep us from getting that kind of info. So unscrupulous companies and people can censor you to cover up their misdeeds.

[...] 24. I would suggest you contact your senators and tell them to vote against the bill.Thanks to Scared Monkeys for bringing this video to my attention explaining this awful legislation.google_ad_client = [...]

William LaSalle on
January 18th, 2012 5:37 pm

SOPA and PIPA are both wrong and stupid.

We have copyrite protection already. Enforce the laws we have, do not take away the Fair Use Clause of our copyrite protection law.

The United States has enough laws we do not need pages and pages more of laws taking away what freedom we have.

If your senator or represenative supports any law making the internet more restricted you should vote against him or her every time he runs for office.

The internet should be free.

A communist nation like China can chain the web and make it illegal to post anything. In the United States censorship of the internet is wrong.

[...] curious, if the Feds could take down an uber web site like Megaupload, what do they need SOPA and PIPA for? So what is the need for SOPA and PIPA. Let me rephrase the question to the US Congress, what [...]